An airplane in the wind

An airplane is traveling at 30 m/s and wishes to travel to a point 8000 m NE (45 degrees). If there is a constant 10m/s wind blowing west:
A) In what direction must the pilot aim the plane in degrees?
B) How long will the trip take?

2. Relevant equations

Basic kinematic equations and trigonometry.

3. The attempt at a solution

Since I know only the magnitude of the velocity vector, and have to find the direction, I'm having trouble.

I've tried taking the arcsin of 10/30 (Opposite over Hypotenuse) and got 19.47 degrees. Using the Law of Sines, I can calculate the other angles and the other side length.

Side Length (m/s) Angle (Degrees)
10 19.47
30 58.4
29.33 102

Obviously, the 102 degrees doesn't make sense, since it is not opposite the largest side.

An airplane is traveling at 30 m/s and wishes to travel to a point 8000 m NE (45 degrees). If there is a constant 10m/s wind blowing west:
A) In what direction must the pilot aim the plane in degrees?
B) How long will the trip take?

Since I know only the magnitude of the velocity vector, and have to find the direction, I'm having trouble.

I've tried taking the arcsin of 10/30 (Opposite over Hypotenuse) and got 19.47 degrees. Using the Law of Sines, I can calculate the other angles and the other side length.

Side Length (m/s) Angle (Degrees)
10 19.47
30 58.4
29.33 102

Obviously, the 102 degrees doesn't make sense, since it is not opposite the largest side.

Am I making this much more difficult than it really is?

Please advise.

Likely you aren't making it difficult enough.

What you do have is a vector addition. Except this one involves certain variables. I would recommend that you construct the vectors and their components, and then add them as you know they must be added to end at your destination.

For instance let A be your wind speed blowing West. Withe East being positive X and H being the time to get there: